Snyder's Estate

1 Pa. D. & C. 513, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 90
CourtPennsylvania Orphans' Court, Allegheny County
DecidedJanuary 13, 1922
DocketNo. 415
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 513 (Snyder's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Orphans' Court, Allegheny County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder's Estate, 1 Pa. D. & C. 513, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 90 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Trimble, J.,

William P. Snyder, a prominent manufacturer of Pittsburgh, Penna., died Feb. 3,1921, at the age of sixty years. A writing [514]*514signed by the decedent, purporting to be his last will and testament, dated Nov. 28, 1919, and another likewise signed by him, purporting to be a codicil thereto, dated Dec. 1, 1919, were probated together on Feb. 26, 1921, without a caveat or objection thereto. On the last mentioned date letters testamentary were granted to four executors named in said writings on their sworn petition, praying that the Register of Wills grant said letters to them. These executors are trustees virtute officii, and are his widow, Mary C. B. Snyder, his son, William P. Snyder, Jr., Henry Irwin, Jr., and George L. Collard. Charles H. McKee, the other executor, was a member of the bar of this county, but renounced his right to letters, and has since died. In order that the writings might be probated, the executors produced before the Register of Wills four witnesses, one of whom is a reputable lawyer, who was at that time practicing law in the office of Charles H. McKee, and is still a member of the bar and practicing his profession. All of these witnesses in making their formal proofs declared on their solemn oaths that the decedent was of sound mind and memory to the best of their knowledge and belief.

In these writings which were probated, the decedent bequeathed or devised, or attempted to bequeath and devise, a very large estate of the “value of several million dollars,” as is alleged in the petition hereinafter referred to. The personal property of the decedent was inventoried at $9,372,967.65. There are twenty-six pecuniary bequests amounting to $56,400, a devise of a house and lot to William Jamison, one of the witnesses to the codicil, and a bequest of all of his household furniture and fixtures, the equipment belonging to his stables and garages, and all articles of personal use and adornment to his widow, the said Mary C. B. Snyder. The others of these bequésts are distributed among servants and relatives, and included among the latter are his two grandchildren, each of whom receives $10,000. All of the residue of his estate is bequeathed and devised to his executors above named in trust, to be held by them in their custody for their management and distribution. One-third of the net income from this trust estate is given to his widow absolutely, one-third to his son absolutely, and one-third to his daughter in trust, for and during the term of their lives. There is an unlimited power of appointment given to his son, but a limited power to his daughter. The will forbids her from designating her husband as her appointee, but provides for him a sum which “will be ample and needful to afford him a sufficient competency to enable him to live in like rank and condition as at the time of his daughter’s decease;” and it further forbids him or her, or any husband she may have, from ever becoming an executor or trustee under the will.

On June 27, 1921, his said daughter, Mary Snyder Drew, appealed from the probate of these writings as the will and codicil of the decedent, and filed a petition praying that the probate be set aside and that an issue devisavit vel non be awarded to the Court of Common Pleas. In her petition she alleged as a reason for the relief prayed for, that her father was incompetent to make a will or codicil on the dates of the said waitings. Guardians ad litem were appointed for the two living grandchildren of the decedent.

The executors in their representative and individual capacities, in their answers, denied the petitioner’s allegation of incompetency in these words: “The respondents deny all the averments contained in paragraph 8 (which alleged incompetency), whether by intimation or direct averment, and especially deny that William P. Snyder, at the time of the execution of what are referred to in said petition as the paper writings admitted to probate by the Register of Wills of Allegheny County as the last will and testament of said decedent and codicil thereto, was not of sound and disposing mind, memory and [515]*515understanding, and at said dates said William P. Snyder did not possess testamentary capacity necessary for the making of a valid will, and that at said dates William P. Snyder, by reason of illness, unsoundness and feebleness of mind, was wholly incapable of knowing or appreciating the nature or effect or consequences of the act of making his will, or comprehending the property he possessed, or the natural objects of his bounty, or of understanding or of comprehending the meaning, effect or consequences of the disposition of his estate purported to have been made by said paper writings, and that said paper writings are not the will of William P. Snyder.”

The respondents then prayed that the petition should be dismissed. These all and twenty-two legatees signed or joined in one answer, and William P. Snyder, Jr., made the affidavit to it and six others joined in a similar answer. The guardian ad litem, for the petitioner’s child, one of said legatees to the extent of $10,000, joined with the petitioner, alleging a greater advantage in inheriting from her if the will should be set aside.

At the trial the proponent produced the two witnesses to the will and the two to the codicil, who testified that they saw the decedent sign his name to the writings. The probate record of the signed writings as a will and codicil of the decedent were offered in evidence, and the proponent rested.

The contestant produced eighteen witnesses, and no one of them was asked any questions on cross-examination. The testimony shows that the decedent died of hardening of the arteries, after having been afflicted for several years, and that during the progress of this malady his body and mind became gradually impaired, and, in the opinion of some of the witnesses, he was not competent to make a will on Nov. 28, 1919, or a codicil on Dec. 1, 1919. After the petitioner rested, counsel for' all the respondents, except the guardian for the child of the petitioner, stated to the court as follows: “May it please your Honor, we have nothing to offer in defence, and in saying this I think I ought to say to you that in this we are acting by the direction of our clients.”

It appears from the testimony that as late as the spring of 1920 the decedent was able to travel around, going as far away from his home as Palm Beach, Florida, principally, perhaps, in his automobile, and that “he keenly realized his condition,” and that “his conduct throughout was for the purpose of keeping others from realizing what his condition was.” There is no testimony to show where the writing purporting to be a will was signed, or in what circumstances, whether it was signed in the office of Charles H. McKee, his counsel, or elsewhere, except the mere fact that he signed both papers, and this, notwithstanding the fact that at least the.four witnesses are obtainable who appeared in the register’s office and swore that he was of sound mind when he executed these written instruments. Although a man of very large business interests and extraordinarily wealthy, having stated, as he says in his probated writings, that the chief portion of his estate consisted of his interest in the Shenango Furnace Company, the pig-iron business carried on in the name of William P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 513, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyders-estate-paorphctallegh-1922.